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Let's Actually Not Go There

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Something terrifying has been happening to this country for years, and the worst thing about it is that many Americans don't even recognize it as such.  A malevolent force that we thought we drove out in disgrace has returned, and instead of remembering the damage done in the past and doing everything we can to fight the force back, we are acquiescing, even greeting the resurrected nemesis as a friend.  In private and public, Americans en masse are agreeing that the thing we thought was terrible not even so very long ago is in fact, kind of awesome and worth giving a second chance. I am of course talking about Creed. If you've been to a sports arena lately, you've been subjected to it: massive group sings of "Higher," putting the Christian butt-rocker's biggest hit in the same noughties crowd participation echelon as "My Own Worst Enemy" and "All the Small Things."  Perhaps your most recent trip to your favorite karaoke bar featured a stra...

What is Ohio State Even For?

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For people who live outside of Columbus, the salient feature of central Ohio is the Ohio State University. I suspect even a healthy amount of folks who reside in Franklin County know nothing of High Street beyond what occurs within a mile of the Lane Ave intersection.  As much as I'd like for there to be a popular association with Columbus that goes beyond the enormous scarlet-and-grey blob near our city center, there's just no getting away from how Ohio State shapes the local culture and economy.  This in itself is not necessarily a bad thing-- it brings luminaries like Rick Steves to my neighborhood, after all.  But Ohio State as it's understood by both Columbus residents and the broader world is mainly understood for one thing: Buckeye football. The NCAA is a massive business that would not exist but for the academic institutions that give legitimacy to its insanely lucrative, insanely exploitative teenage-athletics-as-entertainment scheme.  So you'd think that a...

Leave the Politics

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Rick Steves, of swinging his arms and strolling through Edinburgh thoroughfares on PBS fame, might not strike the average public television viewer as a particularly political person.  I mean, just look at him! But when me and my wife went to see Rick give a talk on Ohio State's campus in February, us two ardent Steves-heads had some idea of what was coming.  We've known for years about Rick's advocacy for legal marijuana, his specials on global poverty and fascism, and his book "Travel as a Political Act."  In truth, you don't have to examine any of his guides or shows too closely to see, in this man who spends his life traveling OUTSIDE OF THE UNITED STATES, somebody who's obviously a bit of a lib.   But anybody who didn't know that became aware of it over the course of Rick's stay at the Mershon auditorium.  There to promote his new memoir "On the Hippie Trail," about the revelations the young traveller had while on the route from Istan...